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Introduction

Central banks as social institutions have not attracted a great deal of attention from researchers in law and economics. The central bank is referred to as the bearer of banking supervision duties, so mainstream law and economics literature has tended to be concerned only with the central bank’s regulatory function. However, this old social institution has a far broader role than that seen up to now, and it gives wide research opportunities in law and econom­ics, and increasingly in law and finance (La Porta et al., 1996; 1997). The central bank as an institution has a particularly interesting history.

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Source: Backhaus Jürgen G. (ed.). The Elgar Companion to Law And Economics. Second Edition. Edward Elgar,2005. – 777 p.2. 2005
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